Well you can see from your equation that each mole of heptane produces 7 moles of Carbon dioxide when burned so 5 moles of heptane produces 5 X 7 moles of carbon dioxide. I'll let you do the maths.
Reaction: 1 mole propane : 3 mole CO2
so with 3 mole propane you'll get 3 times more: thus 3x3= 9 moles CO2
The reaction isȘ
C7H16 + 11 O2 = 7 CO2 + 8 H2O
and the answer is 21 moles carbon dioxide.
C7H16+11O2 = 7CO2+8H2O is the balanced equation for the complete combustion of heptane.
When the combustion is complete, the balanced equation is: C7H16 + 11 O2 -> 7 CO2 + 8 H2O.
Balanced equation. C7H16 + 11O2 >> 7CO2 + 8H2O 2.00 moles C7H16 (7moles CO2/1mole C7H16) = 14 moles CO2 ( I forget STP standard, so will use PV = nRT ) (1atm)(V) = (14moles CO2)(0.08206 Latm/molK)(273.15K) Volume CO2 = 14 *0.08206*273.15/1 = 314 Liters CO2
What are the high and low heating values for heptane ((Btu/cu ft)
Yes. Heptane is an ideal recrystallization solvent for acetanilide.
no reaction equation
There is no reaction
This equation is C7H16 + 15 O2 -> 7 CO2 + 8 H2O.
C7H16+11O2 = 7CO2+8H2O is the balanced equation for the complete combustion of heptane.
Heptane has not a pH.
No, heptane is a liquid.
For the complete combustion reaction, the equation is: C7H16 (l) + 11 O2 (g) => 7 CO2 (g) + 8 H2O (g).
When the combustion is complete, the balanced equation is: C7H16 + 11 O2 -> 7 CO2 + 8 H2O.
The chemical equation for Heptane is C2H6.. Wrong Answer. Hepta means 7. Therefore, Heptane has 7 carbon atoms. Since alkanes have the general formula of CnH2n+2, if n is 7, 2n + 2 is 16. Therefore, Heptane has the formula of C7H16.
C7H16 + 1102 ------->8H2O + 7CO2 So 1 molecule of heptane produces 8 molecules of water on combustion and thus 3 molecules produces 24 molecules of water.
Balanced equation. C7H16 + 11O2 >> 7CO2 + 8H2O 2.00 moles C7H16 (7moles CO2/1mole C7H16) = 14 moles CO2 ( I forget STP standard, so will use PV = nRT ) (1atm)(V) = (14moles CO2)(0.08206 Latm/molK)(273.15K) Volume CO2 = 14 *0.08206*273.15/1 = 314 Liters CO2
No, heptane is a liquid at room temperature.